The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 29, 1890, Page 3

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TH LARGEST AN THE) é > | } of affairs. Th | ONLY NATIONAL BANK! IN BATES COUNTY. i pee Fthiat, he ena oe 11000. On domestic of Key. West) CAPITAL, 000 00) Fa, ha F | SURPLUS, - - $25,000 00} increased ¢ | | = laceount of the ir Mae F.J. TYGARD, - - - i «| port 1 wrappers. — = a BERRY, Vi ‘ r cigars the cost ; 1 $5 creased cost of their good under the | de Pecan i ; bald jper 1,000 on the sar yunt. My vublican tariff. The Tribune says Butler yoL. X11. BUTLER, MISSOURI, WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 20, 1890. BATES COUNTY — National Bank, BUTLER, MO. | THE OLDEST BANK: —_—_— _— W. E, TUCKER, DENTIS'T, BUTLER, - MISSOURI. Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart’s Store. 1 | | { Lawyers, J.H. NORTON. Attorney-at-Law. Office, North Side, over Barnhardt’s Jewelry Store. W «0. JACKSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Butler, Mo. Office, South Side Square, over Badgley Bros., Store. Catvin F, Boxtey, PROSECUTING ATTORNEY, CALVIN F. BOXLEY, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Butler, Mo. Will practice in all the courts. ARKINSON & GRAVES, ATTORNaYS AT LAW. Office West Side Square, over Lans- down’s Drug Store. AT LAW, Office North Side Square, over A. L. McBride’s Store, Butler, Mo. Physictans. J. R. BOYD, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Orrice—East Side Square, over Max Weiner’s, 1g-ly ButLer, Mo. DR. J. M, CHRISTY, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office, tront room over P. O. All calls answered at office day or night. Specialattention given to temale dis- eases. ;custoiners: jto the passage « HOW THE TARIFF TAXES Prices ot the cescaries of Lite Up ly the Abommations Bulg. ther nd has to meet the Seifert adds for the comfort of his|that these men are combined “to de- “Owing to the large sup | feat the purpose of the tariffbill and plies of material imported previous |to plunder the make the new tariff “a pretext for a dishonest advance in prices,” that | they “make new duties a pretext for extortion; that they “combine to fleece the public,’ that they haye | adopted “a short-sighted policy of | falsehood;” with many other heated | expressions indicating great dissat isfaction with the way the new law’ is working. The Tribune is candid ; _ If you don’t believe the tariff is a enough to admit, however, that “for tax, go and price some kitchen tin-|® while some articles will be dearer, ware, or a pair of blankets, and find|no doubt,” but adds that “the bless- how they have advanced since the ed compensation is that the greedy McKinley bill went into effect. Then and dishonest usually defeat them- if you are a wage earner and have selves by their own schemes. This been led to believe that the tax is| “blessed compensation” it is expect- levied for your benefit, ask your em- ed, will be realized to some extent in ployer ifhe hasadyanced your wages the November elections. although on account of the new tariff, or if he|0t in the way in which the Tribune proposes to do so.--Indianapolis applies the phrase.—[Boston Post. Sentinel. ON CANNED GOODS. OPPOSED ‘TO CHEAPNESS The McKinley tariff and adminis- trative regulations have a peculiar bearing upon prices of foreign can- ned peas, as well as upon other lines people,” tl f the new tariff it is not probable that all of the above advance will be secured on domestic goods at once. No other tobacco substitute for Sumatra will produce the same cigar, and to match old brands at old prices a reduced cost of labor is the only resource.”—[Chi- cago Times. ON BLANKETS. It is significant, however, that the place selected by the president to attuck goods was Massillon, ©. It} R. R. DEACON, | THE ONLY EXCLUSIVE R at they | WAR | Speedy Justice Amendment. ut for | sourl supreme costlier vase ial M court demands the attention and the support of every citizen of the state who will vote at the November elec- tion. Itis a very simple measure fi You Don't You Will Have to anda very neeessary one. It adds! Pay Handsome For It. two new justices to the supreme | bench and so divides the bench as to expedite businese. The only ad- | ditionai expense entailed by it is the salary of the two additional judges. ae ee ee =f my — no — in taxation future there will be an all-round in- (7 ab wan cave mucity expense boty crease in the price of certain lines | Of time and money to those who of dry goods. The increase will be | have business in the courts. no trifling affair, but will be of such ious Jes) has uncesased ARE by 000,000 in population und at « atill mzgnitude as to open the eyes and i Z A affect the pocket-books of persons | greater rate in business since adopt- lion of the constitution fixing the unfortunate enough to be in the po- | z sition of purchaser. The advance, number of supreme judges at five. There is now more bueinees than it is rumored, will take place on or A : about October 1st, and will affect not Sy. five judges can possibly - attend only imported manufactured goods, to, and it is still constantly bean but also all goods manufactured in ing so that the court ae already 850 this country, protected under the {oases oo nrrears with its docket, and provisions of the recent tariff legis- | is falling eo farther behind’ at the intion: | rate of over 34 cases a year—a rate | which must be further increased in The constituti the rehef of the less than 100 pe 1d Republiear LOpring- GET AN OVERCOAT OUICK. The McKinley Tariff Bill Responsible For the Situation. The class of goods which will be @ WITH ABSOLUTE SAFETY. tis pleasantt > the ta Prepared} DLEMING DROS., PITISSURGH, PA. f self. but of his country and needs, Pwould 1 » Grover Cleve land. Wh ias xecomplished is the very highest attribute to the possibilities of American citizenship. country lawyer in the city of Buf- falo, he shed lustre upon the high profession which he had chosen. As the mayor of his native city he pre- sented as his record a clean and eco- nomical administration. Coming into the highest position in the laad without and with searcely a precedent to guide him in the conditions which sur- rounded him, he won the affection of his party and commanded the re- spect and admiration of his oppon- ents. I find myself in one of the proudest positions of my life in be- ing permitted to present tc you Grover Cleveland as the typical Amer- ican. previous experience Lockwood, Mo., Oct. 22.—Judge David A. DeArmond, democratic candidate for cougress, spoke to large crowds at Arcola, Lockwood and King’s poin in this county to- day. He handled the republicans land independents in w manner that most immediately affected will be i proportion to the increase of popula must not be rashly assumed that this circumstance contained any covert allusion to the cheap funeral dis- present appearances theeftect would 'geem to be chiefly to increase the of foreign fancy groceries, but. to} |courses which Senator Ingalls of tained by the simple process of : That ag- gregate importations will be reduc- ed is hardly probable, but the addi- = jobbers’ margins of profit. translating the sermons of Massallon from Frénch into English. Lest) © some such errors as this should be| tion to the charge for packages op- leost to consumers and cut a slice off | ‘tion and business unless the court principally : | is relieved material, clothing and clothing in this line will undoubtedly go up| with the advent of cold weather. To | that justice shall be “without delay.” and winter goods | the purchasing public this is quite : ps: : ; courts is the constitutional right of | all citizens of the state, but is is a serious news. Jack Frost is inexo- demand _ over- | deny them- | perpetrated,we hasten toexplain that jerates decidedly to the disadvantage | Massillon is a town only nine miles of the cheaper varieties of the goods from Canton, where Mr. McKinley and is therefore likely to curtail com- resides, and in the same county. | petition. Thue, the chargeon pack- Thinking of McKinley the president | 88€S containing goods valued at 9 to was naturally led to think of Me- 10 fraues is the same as that on Kinley prices; and, being unable to packages containing goods valued at deny that Mr. McKinley had made 50 francs. which inequalety extends prices highex, he bethought him of | Very generally along the whole line the expedient of trying to demon- of preserved food products. olive oil, starte that cheap goods are deleter- | ete-s making an addition to the cost ious to health, dangerous to morals to the consumer, SU the and depressing to the understand-|®mount of money required to carry C. BOULWARE, Physician and T. Surgeon. Office north side square, Butler, Mo. Diseasesof women and chil- en a specialty. J.T, WALLS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office, Southwest Corner Square, over Aaron Hart’s Store. Residence on Ha- vannah street norrh ot Pine. Missouri Pacific By. 2 Daily Trains 2 KANSAS) CITY OMAHA, COLORALO SHORT LINE 0 Daily ov 4) Kansas City to St, Louis, PUEBLO AND DENVER, PULLMAN BUFFETT SLEEPING CARS and Kansas City to Denver without ¢ H. C. TOWNSEND. nge] + hast ing. The effort was not a brilliant | the goods and giving no compensa- success, but doubtless it was the/ ting advantage, unless an addition best that Dr. Ben could do.—[Cour- to the contribution to the govern- ier-Journal. ment funds may be counted as such. ON GLOVES. |—{New York Commercial Bulletin. ON WOOLEN UNDERWEAR. Perhaps the first article which will If the workingman wants to in- dulge in a pair of gloves this winter he will find another example of the} kind of protection the republican congress has given him. The duties on all sorts of leather gloves have been raised—especially the grades. The average advance in the price of kid gloyes will be three dol larsa dozen. The finer glove is af- fected only slightly, but the 75 cents and $1 article receive the full bene. | fit of the tax. It will cost about 25 cents more.—New York Commercial Advertiser. ON HANDKERCHIEFS. that a new law which concerns him intimately is in operation will be wooled underwear. This is the month for laying in a winter supply. He will find that he will have to pay from 10 to 20 per cent. more than he did last year. That means, accord- ing tothe dealers, an advance of from 10 cents to 25 cents on each garment. A very little affair this may appear toa man with a well- ' filled pocket-book, but the poor man is likely to protest and want to know |why he has to pay more—,New | York Commercial Advertiser. ON GLASSWARE. lower Handkerchiefs under the new tar- iff, “which previously sold for 15 ceuts would be sold at 20 cents, those sold at 25 cents at 33 cents. The two or three manufacturers who with Mr. Durrell in Boston Post ected by the new law. To ar 4 PRETE3 RTION fi } | The New York vies . take the ca A silvered vase, which ithe Boston Journal in scolding ha ad ed their the pretty though cheap orna- | merchants who in- ment, is 2 prices to corres | wake up the workingman to the fact | Tumblers that formerly cost $1 to | $2 a dozen will now, when the full | j had inst ed this increase ha effects of the new law is felt, cost | all = @-- a a oes U gi, a a. rom 25 tov uts more. y | {ready giyen notice that all from 25 to 75 cents more Toy tes jwould be ad sets, opal glassware and like goods! ow taxed 334 per cent. un- | jrable and blizzards lrieht which th “ill |eoats, without any regard te the| Re ercas eye wa 3 é | Selves unless they take the trouble price of the garments, and the great : hal : i | to vote on this amendment making | wholesale houses throughout the) | 5 | eS ~ | it possible for the supreme court to | country have made up their minds lily 1 a | that wraps and clothing of every de pass abecs ily on all cases brought fgets eae is before it. | 8cription must go up, respective of | the condition of pocketbook. | | The situation has been caused by and is directly due to that wonder- | ful and highly complicated piece of | legislative jugglery kuown as the \ i i i McKinley bill. While there is no | 2Ubt of its adoption if a respon wes | ble voie, “yes” or “no,” is cast on combination among the wholesale : Z E The danger is that it will fail of the traders, nor, so far ascan belearned,| ‘ : i Tne ‘ majority required by the constitu- an agreement of any kind as regards |. 3 : ‘tion, not through votes against it, a concerted movement, the rise in> : Ree . | but through votes not cast on it at price it is expeeted will be almost | I. The Missouri eee i simultaneous in all the great whole- | 505 eee ee ae eon | work for the state by calling the sale houses in the principal cities all | : : : ican ie Pee ' matter to public attention in every a county. The needed relief for court, the necessary expedition of the administration of justice should not be allowed to fail through neg- ligence.—St. Louis Republic. No partisan question is involved; Republicans and democrats have paid any attention to the mat ter are equally in favor of the amendment, and there will be no who the Specimen Cases. S. H. Clifford, New Castle. Wis., | was troubled with neuralgia and) rheumatism, his stomach was dis-! ordered, his liver was affected to an | alarming degree, appetite fell away, | jand he was terribly reduced in flesh and strength. Three bottles of Electric Bitters cured him. | Edward Shepherd, Harrisburg, | | Il., had a running sore on his leg of | eight years’ standing. Used three} bottles of Electric Bitters and seven | boxes of Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, and | his leg is sound and well. John’ Speaker, Catawba, O., had fiye large fever sores on his leg, doctors said he was incurable. One bottle Elec- trie Bitters and one box of Bucklen’s Arnica salve cured him entirely. Sold by H. L. Tucker, druggist. Depew on Cleveland. At the banquet given to Gen. Rog- October 9, Mr. Chauncey M. Depew introduced Mr. Cleveland in the fol- lowing manner: “If I were asked toname the most the man who best represents the ene ergy, the unswerving determination and courage of the true American, ‘the man who know duty, andit alone. when public service commands it, the T. W. Sherr the typical Ar nt if Tam to name tsons who buy “fishberries,” with slaughtered. > in protect- whieh fish are i The Hoosiers” b loves and be ing the - rma The constitution of the state says | To so obtain justice an appeal to the | jer A. Pryor in New York City onj| forcible character in American life, | ~~ dy returned if, on fai shows him to be up with the times He ex. McKinley ) Onall the issues of the day, | plained the effect of the j tariff on consumers of {the bill covered, articles that and touched up the Lodge bill giving athorouy into its probable workings. misigut The Wonderful Tower, 5 The highest structure in the world is Enttel Tower, at Paris, 1,000 teet high. gut the great discovery at Dr. Franklin Miles is certain to tower far above itin | promoting ! This wond jup worn o | headache, un happiness and health, erve medicine builds ms, cure » Spasms, ervous prostration, digziness sleepless monthly pains, sexual troubles, etc. Mrs. John R. Miller, or Valparaiso, Ind., a Jonn D. Taylor ot Logansport, Ind., gained 20 pounds a month while taking it. Finely illustrat- ed treatise on ‘Nervous Diseases’? and sample botties of the Restorative Nerv- ine treeat H. L. Tucker, druggist, who | guarantees tt. i | Figures have been made lately by anexpertin pension matters, and |they are enough to pale the cheek of every patrict. By the close of this century—nine years hence—the ) expenditures for peusions will reach the ¢ of $850,- 000,000 jincome of mous sul the government all sources, with ally present from taxes im- highest posed of any nation va earth, is only | $400,000,000. i to come from? i Where is the money Well may the ques- studied with ail Nothing but absolute j bankruptcy and ruin awaits the na ‘ tion.—Ex. tion be asked and | seriousness. { | A New Departure \from ordinary business twethods is {made by the manufacturers of Dr. | Pieree’s Golden Medical Discovery, jin guaranteeing this world-famed | remedy to cure all diseases arising \from derangements of the liver and man who wars in war and is toy | Stomach. as indigestion, or dyspep- 7 i the d: i fies oe — sia, billiousness or “liver complaint In Indiana the druggists are re peace in peace, I would name Gen fr da : oe bli i se rm | quired to keep a record of all per- \or On pure blood. as boils, blotches, disease, salt 7 and swelli Mo &. erupti scalp for Discos f. r tria yenerts

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